With the House of Representatives expected to vote on a tough Iran sanctions bill on Wednesday, a cohort of liberal Democrats are staging a last-ditch effort to stop it.

In a letter obtained by The Cable, Reps. Jim McDermott, John Conyers, Keith Ellison and Jim McGovern urge the House leadership to delay the vote on the bill which they fear could jeopardize the Obama administration’s renewed effort to engage Iran’s newly-elected President Hassan Rouhani on the country’s nuclear program.

The dispute highlights the wide gulf on Iran policy between Congress and the White House. On the one side, you have the Obama administration easing sanctions on Iran last week and planning to engage with Rouhani, a relative moderate, on the nuclear issue in September. On the other side, the Republican-controlled House wants to squeeze Iran’s oil exports to a trickle in a bill expected to pass with ease. That bill could then move to the Senate Banking Committee in September.

"We believe that it would be counterproductive and irresponsible to vote on this measure before Iran’s new president is inaugurated on August 4, 2013," reads the letter. "A diplomatic solution remains the best possible means for ensuring that Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon, and the House of Representatives should not preempt a potential opportunity to secure such an outcome with another sanctions bill."

An aide for Ellison is currently collecting signatures for the letter with a deadline of Tuesday at noon. "Regardless of whether your boss supports [the bill], it could not come at a worse time," reads a note by Senior Legislative Assistant Stephen Lassiter. "Iran’s new president, Hassan Rouhani, who campaigned on improving relations with the West, takes office in two weeks."

In addition to delaying a vote, the lawmakers are also requesting a last-minute tweak to its language."As marked up in Committee, H.R.850 places significant restrictions on the President’s authority to waive sanctions in exchange for Iranian concessions," reads the letter. "We therefore urge that the President’s full waiver authorities that were weakened or removed in Committee to be reinstated in the bill."

A spokesperson for House Speaker John Boehner did not respond to request for comment on the letter.

While the smart money is on the sanctions bill passing, many in Congress are curious about how close the vote will be. That uncertainty stems from a surprisingly successful bipartisan letter signed by nearly a third of the House in June calling for a diplomatic solution to the conflict over Iran’s nuclear program. "As Members of Congress who share your unequivocal commitment to preventing a nuclear-armed Iran, we urge you to pursue the potential opportunity presented by Iran’s recent presidential election by reinvigorating U.S. efforts to secure a negotiated nuclear agreement," read the letter. spearheaded by Reps. Charles Dent (R-PA) and David Price (D-NC).

The openness to rapprochement coincided with increasingly hawkish overtures by other members of Congress. Last Tuesday, at a meeting of Christians United for Israel, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) vowed to introduce legislation seeking the authorization for use of force against the Islamic country unless it reins in its nuclear program. "The only way to convince Iran to halt their nuclear program is to make it clear we will take it out," he said.

Of course, Washington elites don’t all see eye-to-eye on the wisdom of delaying tougher sanctions. "For diplomacy to have any chance of succeeding, it must be coupled with the threat of increased sanctions," Robert McNally, former White House energy advisor to President George W. Bush told Reuters on Sunday. Meanwhile, on Thursday, Lawrence Wilkerson, a former chief of staff to Colin Powell, and General Joseph Hoar, a former commander in chief of U.S. Central Command, penned a piece in The Hill saying "the House must not snuff out hopes for Iranian moderation before Rouhini even gets a chance."

We write to express concern with the timing of H.R.850, the Nuclear Iran Prevention Act of 2013. While some of us have cosponsored this legislation prior to markup by the House Committee on Foreign Affairs on May 22, 2013, we believe voting on this bill at this time and in its current form would be counterproductive to U.S. efforts to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran.

As marked up in Committee, H.R.850 places significant restrictions on the President’s authority to waive sanctions in exchange for Iranian concessions. In doing so, the bill threatens to fracture the unprecedented international coalition working to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran and further weakens U.S. diplomatic efforts by constraining the President’s authority to utilize sanctions as leverage at the negotiating table. We therefore urge that the President’s full waiver authorities that were weakened or removed in Committee to be reinstated in the bill. This includes restoring the President’s national security waiver for sanctions related to weapons of mass destruction or other military capabilities, which was eliminated via an amendment sponsored by Representative Ros-Lehtinen. It also include restoring the President’s full authority to temporarily waive oil sanctions for countries that are cooperating with the sanctions — a critical authority to maintain the unprecedented international coalition working to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran but which was severely limited in Committee by manager’s amendment.

Additionally, we urge that this bill make U.S. policy on sanctions crystal clear to ensure the strongest possible diplomatic effort at the negotiating table by including the following language:

"Statement of Policy — It shall be the policy of the United States to utilize sanctions on Iran as diplomatic leverage in negotiations and to calibrate such sanctions to elicit verifiable concessions from Iran that have a material impact on its ability to develop a nuclear weapon."

Finally, we believe that it would be counterproductive and irresponsible to vote on this measure before Iran’s new president is inaugurated on August 4, 2013. A diplomatic solution remains the best possible means for ensuring that Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon, and the House of Representatives should not preempt a potential opportunity to secure such an outcome with another sanctions bill. While we have no illusions about the nature of Iran’s government, Iran’s president-elect has sent several positive signals that must not be rejected out of hand. Returning these signals with a vote on more sanctions can only serve to undermine potential forces for moderation in Iran and empower hardliners who were defeated in recent elections.

We want to be very clear: we are not calling for sanctions to be lifted unilaterally. Iran must first agree to take verifiable steps that satisfy international concerns about the nature of its nuclear program and ensure Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon. However, it is critical that the President’s ability to ease sanctions in exchange for Iranian nuclear concessions is fully intact, international unity is not fractured by a new sanctions vote, and new opportunities for diplomatic success are not undermined through preemptive action by Congress.

We look forward to discussing these suggestions with you further.

Sincerely,

Share +

TwitterFacebookGoogle +Reddit

113 Shares

About The Cable

The Cable is FP's real-time take on the news driving the day -- from the White House to the Pentagon, Capitol Hill to the State Department -- and the people and personalities at the center of it all.